I LOVE big beers aged in oak, especially when the brewer has put some thought into the type and origin of the barrel.

I'd like to experiment with "barrel aging" by splitting batches of RIS, Grand Cru, barleywine, etc. and aging them on oak cubes soaked in different spirits (wine, port, distilled liquors).

Please post all experiences (good, bad, or indifferent) with different types of oak cubes, soaking media, and pairings with big beer styles - I want to use your suggestions as a starting point for experimentations.

I've had a Bourbon Porter that was conditioned in a used barrel by a local club member. It was a very well made brew. The Bourbon really came away in the nose- it was just like sniffing a glass of the stuff and I could certainly taste the whiskey. A bit overwhelming even for the Porter so maybe this is something to watch out for. I think it had been in the barrel for two weeks at that point.

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The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool. -Richard P. Feynman

I soaked 2 oz of heavy toasted French oak cubes in a bottle of Jack Daniels Whiskey, and added them to a medium bodied, dark DoppleBock. The combination of whiskey soaked cubes was too over powering for this style of beer. I would not do this again unless the Dopple Bock was full bodied and had a complex malt bill/character. I think oak cubes soaked in a spirit would better complement full-bodied complex/roasty winter type lagers or ales of that type.

I also think I prefer Bourbon soaked cubes over Whiskey soaked cubes, but that is a personal preference.

Just a side note from my experience: using a strainer, strain the oak cubes from the spirit you soak them in. Too much spirit carried over into the beer is often overpowering.

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If you don't get in over your head, how are you ever going to know how tall you are.

IMHO,while you can soak cubes/chips (I have), you have more control by oaking to taste, and then adding bourbon (or other) to taste.

Fred

That is a great pearl of wisdom.

I have often heard other wood- and barrel-aged brewers comment that they'd like more wood flavoring in their beers, but nearly all have lamented on how a fresh bourbon or whiskey barrel just imparts too much spirit flavor into the beer too quickly.

Separating the two allows more contact time for the wood character to develop in the beer, and judicious additions of the booze to limit its character.

I highly recommend this technique with Belgian Dark Strong. It is outstanding!

I have done this exact experiment. I brewed a somewhat bigger than normal oatmeal stout (1.075) and after primary split off into 3 1-gallon jugs and bottled the other two gallons. All oak cubes were American oak medium toast. All 1-gallon jugs were bottle conditioned w/ 0.75oz corn sugar. All 1-gallon jugs sat on the liquor soaked oak for just shy of 4 months.

The second 1-gallon jug was "Port Barrel". 1oz Tawny Port (wanted more nutty than fruity) with 0.5oz oak cubes (oak and port soaked for 2 weeks prior to adding to beer). Final gravity 1.016

The last 1-gallon jug was "Rum Barrel". 1oz Meyers Dark Rum with 0.5oz oak cubes (oak and rum soaked for 2 weeks prior to adding to beer. Final gravity 1.015

It was a great experiment to really see what the different liquors do to the finished beer. In my opinion, and the general consensus was that the bourbon was the best, then rum, then port. Even the tawny port lent a bit too fruity flavors for the stout. The rum really put a lot of raisin flavor through which went surprisingly well with the stout, but the bourbon went very well together with the stout. All had a present but not overwhelming amount of oak. Just about right in my book for oakiness. I would encourage you to just take a leap and try it out. It really is amazing to see what the base beer transforms into after having it condition on various liquors.

I've never felt the need to sanitize the oak cubes, you can just drop them right in. Many times I've added oak cubes and have let them age for many, many months with no problems.

Right...you probably don't need to sanitze them, especially if they've been whiskey soaked. If not soaked, and if it makes you feel more secure, you could steam the chips or cubes or even stick them in the oven.

I'd be more worried about contact time. I've tasted a lot of potentially great beers pretty much ruined by too much oak (especially where American Oak is used).Of course, that threshold is something you have to determine for yourself by frequent tasting during the aging process. For me, the big beers are so complex on their own that while some oak character can add a nice dimension to the beer, too much oak can easily overpower the other flavor subtleties happening in the background.

I've never felt the need to sanitize the oak cubes, you can just drop them right in. Many times I've added oak cubes and have let them age for many, many months with no problems.

Right...you probably don't need to sanitze them, especially if they've been whiskey soaked. If not soaked, and if it makes you feel more secure, you could steam the chips or cubes or even stick them in the oven.

I'd be more worried about contact time. I've tasted a lot of potentially great beers pretty much ruined by too much oak (especially where American Oak is used).Of course, that threshold is something you have to determine for yourself by frequent tasting during the aging process. For me, the big beers are so complex on their own that while some oak character can add a nice dimension to the beer, too much oak can easily overpower the other flavor subtleties happening in the background.

Contact time is so hard for me to determine. I take samples out of my oak barrels and the oak flavor is strong so I say okay it's time to rack off the oak and into bottles, but when I taste the beer out of the bottle the oak goes away.

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If you don't get in over your head, how are you ever going to know how tall you are.